Ensemble 
                  Organum has been making CDs for over twenty years. Their raison-d’être 
                  has centred on music as ancient as Roman times right up to the 
                  14th and 15th centuries. If there is one 
                  particular era with which one might associate them it would 
                  be the twelfth century. They are currently based at the superb 
                  Romanesque Abbey church at Moissac in South-West France where 
                  they can research this period with financial support from the 
                  French Government. This disc was recorded where the ensemble 
                  was based until 2001 at the Cistercian foundation of Fontrevraud 
                  Abbey built about 1100 in the beautiful Loire Valley.
                
So 
                  often have French ensembles recorded early music at this spot 
                  that I decided to go and see it for myself, driving down last 
                  May (2006). I arrived exhausted on a hot afternoon to walk into 
                  one of the most inspiring and magnificent if somewhat austere 
                  of Romanesque church interiors I have ever seen. No wonder it 
                  is such a sought after venue, indeed on my arrival a group of 
                  singers were setting up for a recording session to take place 
                  after dark. And what an acoustic! I sang a few plainsong fragments, 
                  the sound swimming around the vaulting and the vast now empty 
                  spaces. What a totally inspiring locale in which to attempt 
                  to get close to this repertoire.
                
The 
                  highlights for an English visitor lie right in the centre of 
                  the nave: the tombs of English Kings Henry I, Richard I and 
                  their wives and my dizzy mind starting to say “What music did 
                  they hear when Fontrevraud was at its height, as a double abbey 
                  for both nuns and monks?”
                
However 
                  this disc is all about the music that might be associated with 
                  the ‘Knights Templar’. I’ve always thought of them as a warring 
                  group whose main aim was to attack the ‘Infidel’ and ultimately 
                  to claim back Jerusalem for Christians. But this is not really 
                  the story and on reading Marcel Peres’ fascinating essays I 
                  realize how wrong I was. To emphasise the more peace-loving 
                  aspect of their lives and their concern for the liturgy and 
                  general religious order the disc ends - at least the penultimate 
                  track does - with the Antiphon ‘Da pacem domine in diebus 
                  nostros’- ‘Give Peace in our time, O Lord’.
                
In 
                  1118 the Templars were founded to guard the holy places in Jerusalem. 
                  They were based in the ancient ‘Temple of Solomon’ so that was 
                  how they forged their name: ‘The Knights of the Order of the 
                  Temple of Solomon’. At first there were just nine knights and 
                  they were assiduous at keeping the Latin liturgy in the basilica 
                  of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. The order expanded after 
                  1130 and their influence spread from the Holy land back into 
                  Europe. They retained brothers who were especially attached 
                  to the daily services and the liturgy and those who took on 
                  more material tasks. 
                
The 
                  music here comes from a manuscript dated c.1175: “a breviary, 
                  written down when Parisian musical circles were just beginning 
                  to formulate square notation” (Peres). It is clearly a French 
                  manuscript and includes some unique pieces. We know it belonged 
                  to a certain Anselm, a monk connected with the Knights Templar’s 
                  liturgy at the Holy Sepulchre; a very remarkable manuscript 
                  in many ways. Some vocal ornamentation is indicated as is some 
                  sense of the rhythm - all explained in Peres’ notes.
                
How 
                  is this reflected in the performances? If you have heard any 
                  of the Ensemble Organum’s thirty discs made over a period of 
                  25 years you will know that they have their very distinct sound 
                  and method of performance. It was originally inspired by Corsican 
                  singers and more generally vocal sounds associated with the 
                  near east and/or the Greek Orthodox tradition. This means that 
                  the group incorporates singers who have especially cultivated 
                  the use of the extreme register, I mean down to D and C below 
                  the bass clef. These they sustain as a drone often for some 
                  considerable period of time. Other vocal techniques include 
                  use of parallel organum, very ornamental solo lines above the 
                  drones, and plainsong which is performed not as a free line 
                  but moving at a regular pulse with rhythmic patterning sometimes 
                  even with a sense of triple time.
                
The 
                  final track, a long Salve Regina is a good example of 
                  their approach. The melody is often sung at the end of the day 
                  whilst the choir stands around the Lady Altar and statue; it 
                  makes an appropriate ending to this well filled CD. The well-known 
                  chant - you will recognize it although it has a few changes 
                  from the usual - is heard sung in a rhythmical way. Later the 
                  verses are performed soloistically with some considerable ornamentation 
                  over deep drones which last the entire fourteen minutes or so 
                  of the track. The style of singing is open and full-throated. 
                  This is a troped text,  that is words are inserted as verses 
                  which are not normally part of the hymn, such as the lines ‘The 
                  Alpha and Omega sent from on high a glorious solace’. The whole 
                  effect is deeply moving, spiritual and quite remarkable. 
                
Mercifully 
                  all texts are clearly laid out in the booklet. 
                
              
Listening 
                to this disc is a fascinating, fulfilling and rewarding experience 
                although you do need to change your musical ears, as it were. 
                You need to listen not as an audience member but to let the music 
                come to you in a spirit of total acceptance and absorption. Allow 
                it to take its time; you can’t rush anything. The final emotion 
                is a spiritual one, so open up the mind and ears and let the full 
                experience sweep you along. 
                
                Gary Higginson